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    Date Issued2019 (1)2016 (1)AuthorBogdanov, Alexei A. Jr. (2)
    Gottikh, Marina B. (2)
    Gupta, Suresh (2)Leporati, Anita M. (2)Alfaro, Joshua (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Radiology (1)Laboratory of Molecular Imaging Probes, Department of Radiology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordNanomedicine (2)Radiology (2)Benzophenone-uracyl (1)Copolymer (1)Enzymes and Coenzymes (1)View MoreJournalNanomedicine : nanotechnology, biology, and medicine (1)Pharmaceutical research (1)

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    Antiretroviral Hydrophobic Core Graft-Copolymer Nanoparticles: The Effectiveness against Mutant HIV-1 Strains and in Vivo Distribution after Topical Application

    Leporati, Anita M.; Gupta, Suresh; Bolotin, Elijah; Castillo, Gerardo; Alfaro, Joshua; Gottikh, Marina B.; Bogdanov, Alexei A. Jr. (2019-03-27)
    PURPOSE: Developing and testing of microbicides for pre-exposure prophylaxis and post-exposure protection from HIV are on the list of major HIV/AIDS research priorities. To improve solubility and bioavailability of highly potent anti-retroviral drugs, we explored the use of a nanoparticle (NP) for formulating a combination of two water-insoluble HIV inhibitors. METHODS: The combination of a non-nucleoside HIV reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI), Efavirenz (EFV), and an inhibitor of HIV integrase, Elvitegravir (ELV) was stabilized with a graft copolymer of methoxypolyethylene glycol-polylysine with a hydrophobic core (HC) composed of fatty acids (HC-PGC). Formulations were tested in TZM-bl cells infected either with wild-type HIV-1IIIB, or drug-resistant HIV-1 strains. In vivo testing of double-labeled NP formulations was performed in female rats after a topical intravaginal administration using SPECT/CT imaging and fluorescence microscopy. RESULTS: We observed a formation of stable 23-30 nm NP with very low cytotoxicity when EFV and ELV were combined with HC-PGC at a 1:10 weight ratio. For NP containing ELV and EFV (at 1:1 by weight) we observed a remarkable improvement of EC50 of EFV by 20 times in the case of A17 strain. In vivo imaging and biodistribution showed in vivo presence of NP components at 24 and 48 h after administration, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: insoluble orthogonal inhibitors of HIV-1 life cycle may be formulated into the non-aggregating ultrasmall NP which are highly efficient against NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 variant.
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    Hydrophobic-core PEGylated graft copolymer-stabilized nanoparticles composed of insoluble non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors exhibit strong anti-HIV activity

    Leporati, Anita M.; Novikov, Mikhail S.; Valuev-Elliston, Vladimir T.; Korolev, Sergey P.; Khandazhinskaya, Anastasia L.; Kochetkov, Sergey N.; Gupta, Suresh; Goding, Julian; Bolotin, Elijah M.; Gottikh, Marina B.; et al. (2016-07-25)
    Benzophenone-uracil (BPU) scaffold-derived candidate compounds are efficient non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) with extremely low solubility in water. We proposed to use hydrophobic core (methoxypolyethylene glycol-polylysine) graft copolymer (HC-PGC) technology for stabilizing nanoparticle-based formulations of BPU NNRTI in water. Co-lyophilization of NNRTI/HC-PGC mixtures resulted in dry powders that could be easily reconstituted with the formation of 150-250 nm stable nanoparticles (NP). The NP and HC-PGC were non-toxic in experiments with TZM-bl reporter cells. Nanoparticles containing selected efficient candidate Z107 NNRTI preserved the ability to inhibit HIV-1 reverse transcriptase polymerase activities with no appreciable change of EC50. The formulation with HC-PGC bearing residues of oleic acid resulted in nanoparticles that were nearly identical in anti-HIV-1 potency when compared to Z107 solutions in DMSO (EC50=7.5+/-3.8 vs. 8.2+/-5.1 nM). Therefore, hydrophobic core macromolecular stabilizers form nanoparticles with insoluble NNRTI while preserving the antiviral activity of the drug cargo.
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